The series finale of The Sopranos aired June 10, 2007. Millions of viewers sat in front of their TVs with Journey's "Don't Stop Believin'" playing, Tony Soprano having dinner with his family at a diner. Meadow finally parks her car and heads for the restaurant. Tony looks up. The screen cuts to black. Silence. Had the TV disconnected? Maybe the cable went out? No. It was David Chase making one of the most debated television decisions in history, and the endless search for the Sopranos ending explained keeps drawing new audiences back to that diner booth almost two decades later.What…
When David Chase pitched the idea of The Sopranos, it would be impossible to predict how a manipulative, murdering, New Jersey mob boss could become one of the most beloved antiheroes in television history. Over the course of six seasons, audiences rooted for his triumphs, no matter how awful the means. So how did David Chase create a modern Italian-American gangster character that broke out of the character archetype? What was it about Tony Soprano that continues to draw so many people into the series for rewatches and first-time watches nearly two decades after the series finale? That question drives…
The magic of The Sopranos characters is how they change throughout the seasons. Whether they are a regular through the show's six seasons, like Tony, Dr. Melfi, or Christopher, or are a fleeting seasonal character (no spoilers yet), each one brought a new element to the world and felt like they had a whole life before they came into the story. They expanded the world of the show, revealed new parts of other characters, and forced them to change. Use this sopranos character list as a guide to how each one connects to Tony's world. There can be a lot…